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Published February 10, 2017 | Published
Journal Article Open

Reliable Identification of Living Dopaminergic Neurons in Midbrain Cultures Using RNA Sequencing and TH-promoter-driven eGFP Expression

Abstract

In Parkinson's Disease (PD) there is widespread neuronal loss throughout the brain with pronounced degeneration of dopaminergic neurons in the SNc, leading to bradykinesia, rigidity, and tremor. The identification of living dopaminergic neurons in primary Ventral Mesencephalic (VM) cultures using a fluorescent marker provides an alternative way to study the selective vulnerability of these neurons without relying on the immunostaining of fixed cells. Here, we isolate, dissociate, and culture mouse VM neurons for 3 weeks. We then identify dopaminergic neurons in the cultures using eGFP fluorescence (driven by a Tyrosine Hydroxylase (TH) promoter). Individual neurons are harvested into microcentrifuge tubes using glass micropipettes. Next, we lyse the harvested cells, and conduct cDNA synthesis and transposon-mediated "tagmentation" to produce single cell RNA-Seq libraries. After passing a quality-control check, single-cell libraries are sequenced and subsequent analysis is carried out to measure gene expression. We report transcriptome results for individual dopaminergic and GABAergic neurons isolated from midbrain cultures. We report that 100% of the live TH-eGFP cells that were harvested and sequenced were dopaminergic neurons. These techniques will have widespread applications in neuroscience and molecular biology.

Additional Information

© JoVE 2017. Date Published: 2/10/2017. This work was supported by grants from the U.S. National Institutes of Health (DA017279, AG033954, DA037743), the Michael J. Fox Foundation, and the Caltech Innovation Initiative funding the Millard and Muriel Jacobs Genetics and Genomics Laboratory at the California Institute of Technology. We thank Brian Williams for optimising the RNA-Seq library protocol and for providing assistance. We thank Henry Amrhein for computational training. We thank Barbara J. Wold for the use of her equipment and laboratory space. We thank Igor Antoshechkin for library sequencing, and for facility management. The authors have nothing to disclose.

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Published - jove-protocol-54981-reliable-identification-living-dopaminergic-neurons-midbrain-cultures.pdf

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jove-protocol-54981-reliable-identification-living-dopaminergic-neurons-midbrain-cultures.pdf

Additional details

Created:
August 19, 2023
Modified:
October 25, 2023